Submission
It’s well known that West Philly is rapidly gentrifying. Developers and more moneyed renters and buyers continue to successfully take more space from poor and working-class Black people. In this process, one of the few negative consequences these newcomers might experience is getting robbed in the neighborhood. In January, the number of robberies in the heart of gentrifying West Philly shot up, in the area between 41st and 49th streets (from east to west) and between Ludlow and Cedar avenues (from north to south). At least eight robberies were reported during that month, according to a University City District (UCD) report. Four homes on Hazel and Larchwood avenues between 49th and 51st streets were also burglarized during this time.
In response, a few of the more unapologetic gentrifiers not only reported the incidents to the police, but also attended a “community meeting” hosted by the police. Following the meeting, the Philly police announced that they would have an increased police presence in the area, including foot patrols specifically in the area between 48th-52nd streets. Sure enough, residents have noticed a lot more cop cars as well as cops on foot in the area since.
On Wednesday, March 6, this increased cop presence and paranoia culminated in the cops shooting a young Black man who live near 49th and Hazel — exactly where gentrifiers had been complaining about burglaries and robberies taking place. Claiming that they had been called to the scene in response to a “stabbing incident” (no stabbing victim was found at the scene) and that he was holding a knife outside a house on the street, the cops shot 25 year old graduate student Kaleb Belay six times (three in the chest). As of this writing he is stable condition at Penn Presbyterian Hospital.
It’s never worth it to call the police over some lost property — and we personally won’t call them to deal with any of our problems. The high 40 and low 50 streets are undergoing intense gentrification. Know that the police’s role is to attract more gentrifiers and push people originally from the neighborhood out. That’s what happened when University of Pennsylvania cleared out an entire neighborhood (what was once called the Black Bottom) of West Philly in order to move the school there decades ago — that’s why UCD security roam the neighborhood.
The police are just looking for an excuse to roll in and further the dispossession and extermination of Black people from the neighborhood. Don’t give them one!
The night after the police shooting, a group of 20-30 people marched down Baltimore Ave with a banner reading “Fuck the Police.” At least two new buildings on the ave between 50th and 48th streets, all with gentrifying new architecture, had windows broken, and one had “Fuck Cops” written on it. The Mariposa Co-Op, which has been a beacon of gentrification in the neighborhood for a long time (known for calling the police on panhandlers), had red paint thrown at one of its surveillance cameras. Anti-police tags and stickers were put up. After the police arrived, things calmed and the march went to the hospital where Kaleb is recovering before dispersing. Throughout the march many passersby and drivers shouted “Yeah, fuck the police!” and other words of encouragement. There were no arrests.
As is usual, the police and media are trying to confuse and bury the story. Initially police reported responding to a call of a man with a weapon, then they said it was a stabbing, although no stabbing victim was found. News media have not been prioritizing the story, instead continuing to publish other stories that justify the further policing of West Philly.
The Eritrean and Ethiopian networks in Philadelphia have come together to support Kaleb. Fundraising efforts have begun to help with costs associated with surviving being shot by the police. A vigil has been organized, and other support meetings have already taken place.
The police and gentrification work together to displace, imprison, and eliminate black and brown people. Each reinforces the other. Gentrifiers encourage the police to do their job, and the police create a welcoming environment for gentrifiers. It’s not surprising that gentrifiers are inviting the police into the neighborhood through the rhetoric of crime and safety (being racist is passe). Despite what either group says, their goals align. It should come as no surprise that Kaleb was shot by the police after neighbors reached out to the police to be more present in the area.
It makes sense to us that people are attacking construction and new buildings in the wake of a gentrification-enabled shooting. Fuck the police! Fuck gentrification!
The building with “Fuck the cops” is owned by a first generation Latino immigrant and long time west philly resident who raised his kids in west philly, sent them to public school in the area, worked his ASS off as an architect for 20 years, and chose to set up shop in the West Philly he loves instead of relocating his successful firm to a different neighborhood. His “gentrifying” architecture as you call it is an original design, not a mass produced builder/contractor building. Shame on you for not doing your research and making assumptions about gentrification based on your bias. Ask questions before you slander a hard working minority member of West Philly. If I were him I’d sue you for libel against his firm.
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You really expect edgy, emotionally reactive leftists to do research before anything?
Amy, that someone is a hard worker and has made themselves a part of a neighborhood doesn’t prevent them from contributing to gentrification. Wealthier and whiter people will still feel more comfortable and welcome moving into somewhere with an architecture office that looks new and has a good reputation, even if the architect is a good person. I’m not saying it’s the most symbolically powerful target, but it’s not something that isn’t contributing to gentrification either, maybe despite the architect’s best intentions.
Please tell us about Kaleb? We are really worried about his condition.
This plays right into the hands of the cops. Expect more of them, and faster gentrification — not less.
Organize against gentrification and work with the community on it; smashing a POC-owned building is not doing anything to serve the community, and it’s naive to think that white suburban kids playing revolutionary (a really visible presence in the neighborhood) isn’t already making gentrifiers more comfortable.
It breaks my heart to see these events taking place, the shootings, the gentrification that is tearing the community to shreds. I’m dismayed to observe one shitbox after another popping up wherever there is a square foot of fallow land.
The standard refrains are shouted out in defense of the gentrifiers: “But the crime!” and “do you want to just have abandoned lots and decaying houses instead”?
We should have political leadership preventing the situation from getting to this point, but the answer can not just be an increased police presence and unchecked development.
it is horrible to see cops shooting a guy, even if he did have a knife. when you see how cops in europe handle someone mentally ill with a knife, it is so much more humane and so much safer for everyone.
the property destruction— i’m sorry, i think you can only justify that with tortured logic. if you want to protest gentrification, spraypaint a bank. if you want to protest police brutality, spraypaint a cop station or a cop car. i live on that block, i have for 25 years, and i think we lucked out with the architect that is renovating the building– he is local, he raises money to support immigrants, he only owns that one building an d his own house a few blocks away. i was sorry to see his building ignorantly attacked. and mariposa– i dont shop there too much because it is too expensive for me, but to blame gentrification on the food co-op is to confuse cause for effect. mariposa has been around since the seventies– it didn’t cause the gentrification. the banks, the developers, the real estate agents, UPenn, the UC district all had a much bigger role. a food co-op that gets a little fancier over time… that’s a symptom, not a driving force. I think your political energy is better spent focusing on predatory lenders stealing black owned houses than people who sell organic milk.
mike you are welcome to go after predatory lenders if that’s how you feel you’re best capable of fighting gentrification. as for the other culprits, people have and continue to go after banks, cops, university city district, developers etc. https://phlanticap.noblogs.org/category/gentrification/
HERES AN IDEA ANTI CAP: ISSUE AN APOLOGY FOR YOUR MISINFORMED VANDALISM.
Kaleb is in critical but stable condition according to his lawyer.
Amy, someone being from there doesnt matter. Nativism is the weakest form of anti-gentrification. It throws trans ppl, queers, and houseless ppl under the bus and ignores the actions of gentirifiers who sre from a place.